Current:Home > NewsQueen Bey and Yale: The Ivy League university is set to offer a course on Beyoncé and her legacy -WealthTrail Solutions
Queen Bey and Yale: The Ivy League university is set to offer a course on Beyoncé and her legacy
View
Date:2025-04-18 10:43:38
With a record 99 Grammy nominations and acclaim as one of the most influential artists in music history, pop superstar Beyoncé and her expansive cultural legacy will be the subject of a new course at Yale University next year.
Titled “Beyoncé Makes History: Black Radical Tradition, Culture, Theory & Politics Through Music,” the one-credit class will focus on the period from her 2013 self-titled album through this year’s genre-defying “Cowboy Carter” and how the world-famous singer, songwriter and entrepreneur has generated awareness and engagement in social and political ideologies.
Yale University’s African American Studies Professor Daphne Brooks intends to use the performer’s wide-ranging repertoire, including footage of her live performances, as a “portal” for students to learn about Black intellectuals, from Frederick Douglass to Toni Morrison.
“We’re going to be taking seriously the ways in which the critical work, the intellectual work of some of our greatest thinkers in American culture resonates with Beyoncé's music and thinking about the ways in which we can apply their philosophies to her work” and how it has sometimes been at odds with the “Black radical intellectual tradition,” Brooks said.
Beyoncé, whose full name is Beyoncé Giselle Knowles-Carter, is not the first performer to be the subject of a college-level course. There have been courses on singer and songwriter Bob Dylan over the years and several colleges and universities have recently offered classes on singer Taylor Swift and her lyrics and pop culture legacy. That includes law professors who hope to engage a new generation of lawyers by using a famous celebrity like Swift to bring context to complicated, real-world concepts.
Professors at other colleges and universities have also incorporated Beyoncé into their courses or offered classes on the superstar.
Brooks sees Beyoncé in a league of her own, crediting the singer with using her platform to “spectacularly elevate awareness of and engagement with grassroots, social, political ideologies and movements” in her music, including the Black Lives Matter movement and Black feminist commentary.
“Can you think of any other pop musician who’s invited an array of grassroots activists to participate in these longform multimedia album projects that she’s given us since 2013,” asked Brooks. She noted how Beyoncé has also tried to tell a story through her music about “race and gender and sexuality in the context of the 400-year-plus history of African-American subjugation.”
“She’s a fascinating artist because historical memory, as I often refer to it, and also the kind of impulse to be an archive of that historical memory, it’s just all over her work,” Brooks said. “And you just don’t see that with any other artist.”
Brooks previously taught a well-received class on Black women in popular music culture at Princeton University and discovered her students were most excited about the portion dedicated to Beyoncé. She expects her class at Yale will be especially popular, but she’s trying to keep the size of the group relatively small.
For those who manage to snag a seat next semester, they shouldn’t get their hopes up about seeing Queen Bey in person.
“It’s too bad because if she were on tour, I would definitely try to take the class to see her,” Brooks said.
veryGood! (358)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Grieving the loss of your mom: How to cope with grief on Mother's Day
- Haitians demand the resignation and arrest of the country’s police chief after a new gang attack
- Mary Lou Retton Is Going to Be a Grandma, Daughter Skyla Expecting First Baby
- Olympic men's basketball bracket: Results of the 5x5 tournament
- RFK Jr. reverses abortion stance again after confusion, contradictions emerge within campaign
- Mass shooting causes deaths in crime-ridden township on southern edge of Mexico City, officials say
- Flash floods kill more than 300 people in northern Afghanistan after heavy rains, UN says
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- WT Finance Institute: Enacting Social Welfare through Practical Initiatives
Ranking
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Indigenous fashion takes the runway with an eye to history — and the future
- Flash floods in northern Afghanistan sweep away livelihoods, leaving hundreds dead and missing
- Fox to the 'Rescue' this fall with 'Baywatch'-style lifeguard drama, 'Murder in a Small Town'
- Taylor Swift Cancels Austria Concerts After Confirmation of Planned Terrorist Attack
- Algar Clark - Founder of DAF Finance Institute
- A police chase ends with cruisers crashing, officers injured and the pursued vehicle getting away
- WT Finance Institute, the Cradle of Financial Elites
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Michigan doctor sentenced to 12 years for distributing opioid pills worth more than $6M
Olivia Munn reveals she had a hysterectomy amid breast cancer battle
Death toll in bombings at displacement camps in eastern Congo rises to at least 35
The Daily Money: Disney+ wants your dollars
Death toll in bombings at displacement camps in eastern Congo rises to at least 35
Roaring Kitty is back and so are meme stocks, GameStop and AMC surge at the opening bell
Solar storm makes northern lights visible to much of US, world during weekend: See photos